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Contributing opinion writer

Trevor J. Levin

Latest Content

Columns

On (Transformative) Experience, Or: The Hot Take Column

Most books should be journal articles, and most journal articles should be footnotes. You get the point: Most columns should be tweets.

Columns

Asking the Right Questions

At Harvard, we’re presented with nearly infinite options with how to spend our time. Yet when sheer circumstance highlights one option as a path of lesser resistance, we often glide right along.

Columns

Telling the Story of the Migrant Caravan

When we see other human beings in pain, we experience empathy. We try to help. That should have been the story of the migrant caravan.

Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 Cover
Music

‘Traveling Wilburys, Vol. 1’: Rock’s Super-Supergroup Turns 30

As Harrison might have recalled from his alter ego project 21 years earlier, the mask of a fake band encouraged creativity and humor.

All Lined Up
Columns

Take Harvard-Yale Back From the Puritans

The University’s paternalistic attempts at intervention will make The Game less fun and more dangerous.

Jay Gonzalez
Columns

The Endowment Tax and Myths of Democratic Accountability

When non-profit entities like Harvard, private citizens like Jay-Z, or even robber barons like Jeff Bezos fund things that benefit society, we should applaud them.

The Three Bicyclists
Columns

Make Cambridge Harder to Drive In

In the century following the Model T, Cambridge redesigned itself to be as car-friendly as possible. With a few miles of bike lanes and a handful of Birds, the city has only begun to reverse the catastrophe.

Music

From Lollapalooza 2018: Bruno Mars Performs from the Top of the Pop World

Mars put a wide range of talents on display—not only singing and dancing but also soloing on a (gold, naturally) Stratocaster on “Calling All My Lovelies.”

Records
Arts

‘Dark Side of the Moon’: An Existentialist Masterpiece

When I first listened to “The Dark Side of a Moon,” which turned 45 years old in March, as an angsty, leftist teen, I was blown away.

Music

From Lollapalooza 2018: Børns Leads Lolla into the Night

Perhaps unsurprisingly for an artist who toured with Lana del Rey, Børns is a creature of the moon. For every degree the sun sank on Lollapalooza during his hour-long 7:30 p.m. set, he seemed to gain in power.

Music

From Lollapalooza 2018: Arctic Monkeys’ Retro-Hypermodernism on Full Display

Arctic Monkeys’ future experiments, whether with Dr. Dre-inspired beats or space-themed concept albums or something else entirely, will likely evince a continuing battle between the old and new.

Music

From Lollapalooza 2018: Trevor’s Day 1 Roundup

In the day’s low point, Lolla displayed a Fortnite tournament—yes, you heard right—at full volume on the main stage during Camila Cabello’s set on the directly-opposite Lake Shore stage. The former Fifth Harmony star best known for “Havana” carried on with a tight, energetic set complete with impressive dance routines, but what were they thinking?

Columns

The Ethics of ‘Selling Out’

By reducing the dizzying variety of post-graduation pursuits to “selling out” versus “not selling out," we obscure the real ethical distinctions.

Columns

Leftward Ho, Libertarians!

As a Democrat-voting libertarian — a label I accept hesitatingly, given its baggage — I’ve watched DSA’s ascendance ambivalently.

Columns

What Is the Value of a Harvard Degree?

Rather than elevating our tastes and abilities, Harvard has merely reshuffled the deck of future employees—with its graduates closer to the top.

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